Formerly known as Easy Comes Easy Goes 2.0. I am a Malaysian who loves Hollywood but has never set foot there. My interests = Anything that interests you including Hollywood, Bollywood and Clint Eastwood. Thanks for reading folks. This blog contains 100% true postings, based on established international media reports and reputable trustworthy sources. No lies or fabrications included. Cheers.

Monday, June 8, 2009

North Korea continued with their nuclear missiles testing even tough the acts had been condemned by the United Nations, United States and the rest of the world.

So if North Korea can't be bargained with in the nuclear controversy, what more in the case of the 2 United States journalists detained and sentenced to 12 years jail for alleged entry into the country.

Poor Euna Lee and Laura Ling... Euna has a 4 year old child. She works as a journalist to support her family..

This is the story by Bill Powell.

The nightmare that began on March 17 for the two American journalists kidnapped by the North Koreans along the Chinese border got worse Monday: Euna Lee, 36 years old and the mother of a four year old, and Laura Ling, 32, were sentenced to 12 years in prison by North Korea's highest court.

Their crime: illegal entry into the country and "hostile acts." The sentence - "reform through labor" - raises the prospect that the two could be sent into North Korea's notorious system for political prisoners - the so called kwan li so, which are infamous for their mistreatment of prisoners.

"Malnourishment and beatings are common," says Kang Chol Hwan, author of The Aquariums of Pyongyang, his account of the ten years he spent as a prisoner in the North (Hwan's grandfather and other family members were also arrested by the security police in North Korea for "crimes" never delineated).

The American journalists, employed by Current TV, a San Francisco-based TV network founded by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, were filming a report about North Korean refugees in China when they were seized by North Korean agents along the border between the two countries.

The U.S. government immediately expressed its dismay, and called on North Korea to release the two women on humanitarian grounds.

But it is hardly a foregone conclusion that the North will comply anytime soon. The two women have become yet another bargaining chip between Washington and Pyongyang, and "no one knows at this point what the North will want for them," says a diplomat in Seoul.

Though Americans will wake up this morning shocked at the harshness of the verdict, they shouldn't be.

This is, sadly, business as usual for the North.

The regime in Pyongyang is nothing if not a mafia state - a family run dynasty that funds itself in part through a variety of illicit businesses, such as illegal arms sales and counterfeiting U.S. currency.

For decades, international kidnapping has been in its playbook. (See pictures of North Korea's secrets and lies at LIFE.com.)

In 2002, Pyongyang admitted what many in Japan had been saying for years - that it had systematically kidnapped Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 80s, using them to train its own spies who were then filtered back into Japan.

Kim Jong Il said at a 2002 summit meeting with then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi that the North had seized 12 Japanese citizens (though he also said to Koizumi that he himself was unaware of the program), including most infamously 13-year-old Megumi Yokota, who was abducted on the way home from school in Niigata, on the northwestern Japanese coast.

Kim had hoped the admission would help relations with Japan. It didn't. Private groups in Japan have insisted that the total number of abductees was greatly understated.

Indeed, the Investigative Commission on Missing Japanese related to North Korea, a citizen's group working on the missing cases, says that it's possible that the number could be much bigger - possibly as many as 500.

Pyongyang further enflamed the Japanese in 2004, when it returned a jar of ashes, which they claimed belonged to young Yokota. The Japanese government asked Teikyo University to conduct DNA tests to verify that they were Yokota's remains. They were not.

The regime has also kidnapped several hundred South Koreans over the years - usually also to help train its spies - but not always.

Since late March, the North has detained a South Korean business executive who was working at the Gaesong Industrial District, a site just across the border in which scores of South Korean companies set up light manufacturing operations.

The project was arguably the most visible success symbol of the so-called "Sunshine Policy" run by Roh Moo Hyun, the former South Korean President who committed suicide in May.

Pyongyang revoked all the contracts at Gaesong last month, and has continued to hold the businessman, apparently as a way to express its anger at current South Korean President Lee Myung Bak's harder line toward the North.

But it's not always some twisted policy goal that drives Pyongyang to kidnapping;

Kim has also resorted to abduction to satisfy his personal whims. The North Korean dictator has long had a passion for movies, but he evidently believed North Korea's cinema wasn't up to his standards.

In the late 70s, when his father, Kim Il Sung, was running the country, Kim apparently ordered the abduction of Shin Sang-ok, then perhaps the most famous film producer in the South, and his wife, Choi Eun-hee, a famous actress. Shin was imprisoned for four years, then forced to make a socialist-friendly version of Godzilla. He and his wife eventually escaped during a business trip to Vienna in 1986. Shin died in 2006 at age 80.

North Korea, in the mind of many Americans, is often seen as a kind of crazy aunt in the attic - an entity no one pays attention to until she pops out and does something vaguely nutty.

Sometimes Kim Jong-Il is even portrayed as a figure of comic relief, as in South Park's Team America: World Police. Indeed, Google 'North Korea' and up pops up a site entitled: "6 Reasons North Korea is the Funniest Evil Dictatorship Ever."

Strike "funniest." Other adjectives are more fitting. The families of the two young journalists headed now into the grips of what is arguably the world's worst penal system aren't laughing today. And neither, most assuredly, is anyone in Barack Obama's White House.

Missing British Child, Madeleine McCann

British girl missing in Portugal since May 3rd, 2007. Madeleine McCann A combination of two pictures released by Madeleine McCann's family. One shows Madeleine at the age of 3 (L), and an 'age progression' image of what she would look like at the age of 9. Madeleine McCann disappeared on May 3, 2007, just days before her fourth birthday, from the family's holiday apartment at the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz. Her parents were dining with friends at a nearby restaurant when she went missing. If you have any information on Madeleine's whereabouts, please contact the Operation Grange team at 0207 321 9251 or OperationGrange@met.pnn.police.uk. More info about Madeleine can be found at: findmadeleine.com

Help 12 year old NEOWELL VANN HOUTTON, Thalassemia patient from Sabah, East Malaysia

Missing Child in Malaysia / Kanak2 hilang

Satishkumar Tamilvanan, 5 years old is missing in the district of Jalan Permatang Pauh, Seberang Jaya, Penang at 2.00 p.m. on the 8th of August 2012. He was last seen in green shorts,a yellow T-shirt with a Spiderman motif and clad in shoes and socks. If you have seen this child anywhere, please contact the Action Room, Police HQ,Seberang Perai Tengah at 04-538 2222 or INSP Mohamad Ehsan Bin Abu Bakar at 012-2494002.